ART
IMAGE PUBLICATIONS
- THE EARLY YEARS
UNIT:
ANIMALS IN THE WILD
- SAMPLE LESSON
Teacher’s
Guide by:
Christine
Thompson
Activity three:
JEAN-LÉON GÉRÔME, La
tigresse et ses petits
(Tiger
and Cubs)
ARTWORK:
GÉRÔME,
Jean-Léon, La tigresse et
ses petits (Tiger and Cubs) (
Catalog #1.12)
OBJECTIVES
Children
will:
- Compare
two paintings with similar subjects and themes.
- Relate
the theme of the paintings to their own experiences.


Gérome (catalog 1.12) Delacroix
(catalog 137)
CONCEPTS
MATERIALS
Gérome
attributed the success of his animal paintings to his early
studies at the menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes in Paris.
The soft handling and the unemphatic drawing in this work
suggest that it was painted in the 1880s, when Gérome is said
to have done a series depicting wild animals.
PREPARATION
Gather
materials for drawing. Find or record lullabies to play before
and during the drawing activity.
THINGS
TO TALK ABOUT
Place
the reproductions side-by-side.
Invite children to name or describe the things that are
the same in both paintings:
-
How
are these two paintings alike?
-
Which
painting shows more tigers?
-
In
which painting are the tigers closer to us?
-
Are
the cubs in this painting by Gérôme older or younger than
the young tiger in Delacroix’s painting? How can you tell?
-
What
is the young tiger in Delacroix’s painting doing?
-
Does
the mother tiger in Gérôme’s painting have a different
expression on her face?
-
What
is this mother doing?
-
Do
the cubs seem comfortable, even though they are sleeping on
hard ground?
-
Do
all tigers live in such dark and rocky places?
(Explain to the children that the artists who painted
these two pictures both lived in France, and both saw tigers
at Jardin des Plantes - like a zoo - where tigers were
housed in rough landscapes like these.)
THINGS
TO DO
Draw
children’s attention to the painting by Gérôme, and the
positions of the sleeping cubs nestled against their mothers.
Ask children to reflect upon similarities between their
own bedtime routines and those that sleepy animals enjoy:
-
Do
mother tigers sing lullabies?
-
Do
mother or father or grandparent tigers read bedtime stories
to cubs?
-
Do
young tigers have to brush their teeth? Put on their
pajamas?
-
Who
helps you to get ready for sleep?
-
What
do you need to feel cozy and safe?
-
How
do you look when you are sleeping?
(Encourage children to model sleeping poses for one
another.)
Play
lullabies as children draw themselves getting ready for sleep. Provide playdough for additional explorations of sleeping
poses.
MORE
THINGS TO DO
EXPLORE THE IDEA
OF FAMILY
Ask
children to look again at the two reproductions. Do the young
tigers seem to feel safe and protected because they are with
their families? Ask
the children to list things members of their families do
together, such as eat, relax, go to the park, shop for food, and
so on. Do animals do some of these things too? Do they do some things differently than human families would?
Invite
children to compose a story about the family of tigers Gérôme
painted. What did
the cubs do all day that made them so tired?
Display the completed story or a variety of shorter
responses next to the reproduction.
Encourage
children to draw animal families.
Very young children may represent the idea of family
simply by drawing several animals on the same page.
Challenge older children to draw animal families in
settings such as their home or engaged in activities.
Gather
several stuffed animals of the same species – monkeys,
rabbits, cats, mice, and so on – to facilitate categorization
and informal discussions of family resemblance.
COMPARE
TEXTURES
Gather
objects which feel like surfaces represented in Gérôme’s
painting that are small enough to be held in children’s hands:
rough and smooth pebbles, fur, cotton balls, a pocket
mirror, sandpaper, and a bit of felt, for example.
Ask the children to find a part of the painting that
would feel like the object in their hands.
Challenge them to identify parts of the painting that
look hard and parts that look soft.
EXPLORE
REFLECTIONS
Draw
children’s attention to the shape at the bottom of Gérôme’s
painting. What is this? Can
we tell what it might be if we turn the reproduction upside
down? Challenge
children to locate a tiger’s nose and chin inside this shape,
and to offer explanations for this mysterious appearance.
Encourage children to explore reflections in puddles and
windows. Discuss
the distortion that makes these reflections different from
mirror images. Provide
aluminum foil and/or mirrors and invite children to use dolls or
cut out figures to learn more about reflections.
PLAY WITH LIGHT
SOURCES
Ask
children to look again at the reproduction of Gérôme’s
painting. What time of day do they think it is in the world of this
painting? How can
they tell? Where is
the lightest part of the painting ? The darkest ?
Provide flashlights, cardboard boxes, and an assortment of small
toys, blocks, animal figurines, and/or action figures.
Challenge children to create a scene inside the box and
to attempt to illuminate it in different ways.
Suggest that they try to highlight the objects at the
front of the scene, or on one side, or the back, while leaving
the rest of the objects in shadow.
WATCH
TIGERS IN MOTION
Videotape
short sequences of animals in motion from nature programs on
television, or contact your local librarian for help in
selecting films which show tigers moving through the jungle.
Children who have the opportunity to study and review
short segments of film showing tigers in motion will be more
fully prepared for dramatic play.
MOVE
LIKE TIGERS
With
the children’s help, compile a list of movements tigers make
when they are resting, playing, or hunting.
Encourage children to move like tigers into their
« caves » at naptime, to lay down like tigers, yawn,
stretch, and so forth.
CREATE
ENVIRONMENTS FOR TIGERS
Talk
to the children about zoos which attempt to recreate natural
habitats for the animals they house, many of whom are used to
very different kinds of weather and land. Assign the task of designing an environment that would be
comfortable for tigers who were coming to live in a zoo.
Discuss the conditions that would be necessary in such an
environment. Provide
clay or playdough, and help children collect additional
materials such as pebbles, twigs, small plants, and so on.
Encourage children to use clay to model tigers to live in
the environment they create.
RESOURCES
QUESTIONS ?
Call
Rachel Ross, Art Education Consultant, at 1 800 361-2598 or
write to rachel.ross@artimagepublications.com.